Family loses house to Big Brother over a friggin MOUSE!

warwulf

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Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


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The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance
 
maybe you should stop reading garbage called "the last resistance" and take off the tinfoil hat

you also might want to consider not getting your "news" from someone calling himself onan coca
 
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maybe you should stop reading garbage called "the last resistance" and take off the tinfoil hat

you also might want to consider not getting your "news" from someone calling himself onan coca
Why do Liberals like yourself CONSTANTLY attack the Free Press?

If you have read the story you'd see that he/she references the New Mexico Watch Dog.
NM ranching family tells feds: 'Don't fence us out' « Watchdog.org

I got some advice for you Jillian. Why don't you SUPPORT Instruments of Democracy for a change? You know, Free Speech, Freedom of the Press?

Stop being a such a f*ckin' Totalitarian.
 
I saw an interview with the family and they are asking for proof that the mouse exists.
So far nothing from the EPA.
 
Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


Share285 Tweet100 Share566 Email36









The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance

fuck the mouse, turn loose a herd of cats in that 8 foot fenced area :up: ... :lmao:

funny how liberscum want to protect mice, tiny little fishes, worms and most maggots like themselves.., yet want to kill all human babies, makes sense in a LiberNazi world....., RIGHT ?
 
It's the cattle! The liberals want to end cattle ranching and they will do anything and everything they can to stop it.
 
Eminent domain, the family will receive adequate money, I know two very conservative atheists that took the state for a quarter million, for a few feet of a small mulch business. Not taking "welfare" only applied to that couple when it wasn't hundreds of thousands.
 
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What the heck is with people lying in thread titles?

No decision has been made yet on whether to install walls that would impact their cattle business = "family loses house" ???

What are you fucking retarded?
 
fuck the mouse, turn loose a herd of cats in that 8 foot fenced area :up: ... :lmao:

funny how liberscum want to protect mice, tiny little fishes, worms and most maggots like themselves.., yet want to kill all human babies, makes sense in a LiberNazi world....., RIGHT ?

Yeah...the obvious solution does seem to be wiping out the mice...no mice, no problem!
 
Here is another story on the same subject.


Of mice and men ? it?s jumping mouse versus ranchers in the Jemez | Albuquerque Journal News


Strange enough, the public campground which sits in the middle of the mouse haven may stay open but the fence is needed for the cows? There were suggestions which may have the a gap between fences but this was shot down, even though it was stated it would work. I also found it strange there has not been an in-depth report since 2005 on this mouse.
 
Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


Share285 Tweet100 Share566 Email36









The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance

Any endangered critter > Any human being

Humans aren't endangered but we gleefully commit genocide on our fellow inhabitants of this exception little planet. If someone's financially inconvenienced to spare another lifeform so be it.

One of my many worries is what aliens might think of us. Why should they not wipe us out to take our planet's resources when we so readily wipe out our fellow lifeforms to say nothing of one another?
 
Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


Share285 Tweet100 Share566 Email36









The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance

Any endangered critter > Any human being

Humans aren't endangered but we gleefully commit genocide on our fellow inhabitants of this exception little planet. If someone's financially inconvenienced to spare another lifeform so be it.

One of my many worries is what aliens might think of us. Why should they not wipe us out to take our planet's resources when we so readily wipe out our fellow lifeforms to say nothing of one another?

If one of your worries is what aliens might think of us, you should really get your priorities in order. :lol:

When they show up, please let me know, I've got some zombies to set loose on them. :rofl:
 
Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


Share285 Tweet100 Share566 Email36


The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance

Any endangered critter > Any human being

Humans aren't endangered but we gleefully commit genocide on our fellow inhabitants of this exception little planet. If someone's financially inconvenienced to spare another lifeform so be it.

One of my many worries is what aliens might think of us. Why should they not wipe us out to take our planet's resources when we so readily wipe out our fellow lifeforms to say nothing of one another?

By all means, then: off yourself immediately!
 
Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse

Posted on July 7, 2014 by Onan Coca — 242 Comments


Share285 Tweet100 Share566 Email36









The federal government and the environmental regulators who act capriciously in its name continue their assault on innocent American citizens.

The most recent horror story proving that the federal government has grown far too big and far too powerful comes to us from New Mexico. A family in the southwestern state is in danger of losing everything – their home and their livelihood – because the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided that a mouse that lives on their land is an endangered species.


A family’s livestock enterprise in New Mexico is in danger of being completely shut down now that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has declared the meadow jumping mouse to be an endangered species, Watchdog reports.

The new regulations came into effect from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service last month, and as a result, the U.S. Forest Service is considering installing 8-foot high fences to protect the mouse, which would permanently prevent the Lucero family’s livestock from grazing.

The family is already in possession of grazing permits from the federal government, but the permits become irrelevant in the event that a new species is declared endangered.





The Lucero family has had their livestock graze on the land in the Santa Fe National Forest for more than a century, starting first with sheep, but then switching to cattle in the 1920s.

“We’re not insensitive to protecting the mouse,” Orlando Lucero said. “But let’s work on something that keeps everyone’s interests in mind.”

No decision has been made by the Forest Service officials, but they have stated that they are required by law to protect the meadow jumping mouse through the Endangered Species Act, and grazing has been listed as one of the primary threats to the mouse’s habitat.

At the moment, the Forest Service is engaging in a preliminary scoping process, in order to determine what action needs to be taken to secure the longevity of the jumping mouse.

It may take anywhere from 30 days to eight months for a decision to be reached.

“It’s been our experience that a fence like that to protect that occupied habitat seems to be the best way we can do our affirmative duty and protect that habitat,” said Robert Trujillo, the acting director of Wildlife, Fish and Rare Plants for the Southwest Region of the US Forest Service.

“Why would we give it up after four generations?” Orlando Lucero argued. “We were here before the (Forest Service), back during land grants. We’re not going to go nowhere.”

By Jonah Bennett from the Daily Caller News Foundation

Read more at Family to Lose Everything because of "Endangered" Mouse | The Last Resistance

fuck the mouse, turn loose a herd of cats in that 8 foot fenced area :up: ... :lmao:

funny how liberscum want to protect mice, tiny little fishes, worms and most maggots like themselves.., yet want to kill all human babies, makes sense in a LiberNazi world....., RIGHT ?

Cats or foxes.
 
fuck the mouse, turn loose a herd of cats in that 8 foot fenced area :up: ... :lmao:

funny how liberscum want to protect mice, tiny little fishes, worms and most maggots like themselves.., yet want to kill all human babies, makes sense in a LiberNazi world....., RIGHT ?

Yeah...the obvious solution does seem to be wiping out the mice...no mice, no problem!

I'm glad they haven't declared the mice in my barn an endangered species. I wage war on them in every way I can...well, I don't use poison, but I employ a tribe of feral cats and mouse traps when needed, and not the "kinder, gentler" kind, either.
 
Any endangered critter > Any human being

I completely agree, and would go a step further: Any non-humyn animyl > Any humyn being

Humans aren't endangered but we gleefully commit genocide on our fellow inhabitants of this exception little planet. If someone's financially inconvenienced to spare another lifeform so be it.

Again, I completely agree with this. We shouldn't be above taking everything this hick owns in order to maybe save a small population of these mice. He's probably a racist anyway, so he very likely deserves it.

One of my many worries is what aliens might think of us. Why should they not wipe us out to take our planet's resources when we so readily wipe out our fellow lifeforms to say nothing of one another?

Once more, I agree. One of our top priorities in the world needs to be not being the subject of intergalactic gossip. Who KNOWS what the Gazorpazorpians would say if they found out that we still practice the death penalty in some areas?

This planet is truly barbaric, and we need to clean it up before some superior, all-womyn alien species comes along and wipes us all off the face of the Earth before claiming it as their own.
 

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